Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Which of the following gives you the most ecstatic feeling? [emoji23]

o "One more turn and it's all in!" - winding the mainspring into the barrel by hand

o "Fourth wheel in... Third wheel in... Escapement wheel in... And they are all turning freely! Wee!" - aligning the train gears into their jewels

o "swing please... Swing please... Yes!" - installing and seeing the balance assembly swing into action

o "0s/day...0.0ms...270 degrees... Straight line... Not bad!" - after regulating the watch

o "Such a pretty watch!" - admiring the assembled watch head without strap on wrist while still wearing finger cots

o "You know what? I fixed this myself!" - telling your wife/children/friend your new hobby

o "I can watch all these videos all day!" - gets popcorn and sit in front of the computer to watch Mark's videos

  • Like 2
Posted

Watches can be so unforgiving at times, and over time, you learn to be more, and more patience with them, and then they become less unforgiving :)

  • Like 1
Posted

Best feeling...

'the click as the last pivot falls into place'

 

Worst feeling...

'the click as you tighten down the train bridge screw (means you've broken a pivot)'

'the 'oooHH sh!t' feeling when the watch you're working on hits your lap on the way to the floor'

 

 

Anil

  • Like 2
Posted

Balance in and instant start for me! :)

Same for me !

Nothing is more depressing than doing all the dis-assembly, getting the parts fixed and cleaned, putting it all together and when the balance goes in, nothing happens...

  • Like 1
Posted

what about the twang of the click when the mainspring you thought you had fixed  comes off its arbour again when winding  :hot:

  • Like 2
Posted

I would have to go with when you drop that balance in and it comes to life on its own..

 

the worst is finishing up a restored watch and as you rubbing off something on the train bridge with some rodico and your thumb hits the balance and you here a click and realized you just broke your balance staff... I walked away from my shop for a few days after that one..

  • Like 4
Posted

Balance in and instant start for me! :)

 

Id have to agree with Geo, that is always a guilty pleasure for me.

 

Personally for me its discipline of patience, patience , and more patience. Perfecting each stage and giving my very best efforts & concentration into each part. Hand polishing alone can take days or even weeks, but results are worth it.

  • Like 2
Posted

Id have to agree with Geo, that is always a guilty pleasure for me.

Personally for me its discipline of patience, patience , and more patience. Perfecting each stage and giving my very best efforts & concentration into each part. Hand polishing alone can take days or even weeks, but results are worth it.

I agree! And I should have added that aspect of watch repair. At this stage of acquiring skills, I tend to focus on servicing the movement. But I guess knowing how to handle crystals, watch cases are just as important... And satisfying!
  • Like 1
Posted

First swing of the balance has to be right up there, but what about that feeling when you finally track down that elusive part after 3 hours on the Internet?

S

I know the feeling! I once had a need for several parts of a movement but had a hard time finding all of them, not to mention the cost has between piling up. But when I saw someone selling the same movement albeit not working and for repair, I gambled and grabbed the item. With my fingers crossed I waited for the movement to arrive, hoping at least the parts I needed are in good condition. Fortunately, the gamble paid off! Happiness!
Posted

For me finding the reason for a fault & fixing that fault.  A real sense of achievement :woohoo-jumping-smiley-emoticon:

When a customer would say I've had this watch or clock repaired, I've taken it back many times and it still doesn't work. When you repair the fault and knowing it is going to be satisfactory. That would be one of my best feelings, because you know next time the person wants something repaired there more likely to bring it to you then to take it elsewhere. 

  • Like 1
  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

For me finding the reason for a fault & fixing that fault. A real sense of achievement :woohoo-jumping-smiley-emoticon:

That's me too. And when the reading on the timegrapher is perfect after fine tuning the hairspring.

Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk

  • Like 1

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Believe the relume (not a fan) was done a long time after the damage. 
    • I can only think of some chemical reaction to reluming
    • I have a little milling attachment for my WW lathe, but very rarely use it and not for wheel and pinion cutting. For that I use a small Sixis 101 milling machine. I normally do direct dividing, but sometimes have to do an odd count and use the universal index which also fits on the Sixis.   Back in the day when I didn't have a mill, I would cut gearing on my Schaublin 102. It has a universal dividing attachment which fits the back of the spindle. Both it and the one for the Sixis are 60:1 ratio, and with the set of 4  index plates I can do almost any division. When I've had to do a strange high count prime number, I print a disc with the needed division and just place the plunger on the dot. Any position error is reduced by a factor of 60 so still plenty accurate.   The machines are a mess in the pics as I'm in the process of making a batch of barrels for a wristwatch 🙃.   This is the Sixis. The head can also be placed vertically, as can the dividing spindle.   Dividing plates. The smaller ones fit another dividing spindle.   Universal divider for the Sixis. I put it together with parts from an odd Sixis spindle that takes w20 collets, like the Schaublin 102, and a dividing attachment from a Schaublin mill.     The dividing attachment for the 102. The gear fits in place of the handwheel at the back of the headstock.   And the little milling attachment for the WW lathe. I just set it on the slide rest to illustrate the size, you can see from the dust on it it really doesn't get used much. I think only when I change bearing in the head, to kiss the collet head seat (grinding wheel still in the milling attachment).
    • I read a lot about the quality (or lack thereof) of Seiko's 4R, 6R, 8L  movements...or more specifically the lack of regulation from the factory. Especially when compared to similar priced manufactures using SW200's or ETA's. I thought I'd ask those more in the know, do the 4R's and 6R's deserve their bad reputation, is it fairly easy for someone with minimal skills (or better yet a trained watch mechanic) to dial in these movements to a more acceptable performance.    For background I spent more on a 1861 Speedy years ago, expecting that the advertised 0-15s/d  would probably perform more like 5-7s/d. In reality it's been closed to 2-4s/d. 
×
×
  • Create New...